Inside Margaux s Very Magical Brooklyn Dinner

The Margaux brand was built off of celebrating female community and last night proved just how powerful that community can be. After meeting in college and starting their professional careers together, Sarah Pierson and Alexa Buckley knew they wanted to create something that allowed the women around them to look and feel good. However, they didn t know exactly what “that” should be: "We just imagined it to serve the women that, hopefully, we are still serving today, which is the woman that is doing things and going places and is incredibly multifaceted,” Pierson told Vogue. “We imagined it as a canvas for celebrating women who kind of fit that mold. That is one of the reasons why we decided to name it [their brand] Margaux, and not after the two of us, because we wanted it to be this universal idea that anyone could identify with or aspire to be.”
At last night’s dinner, a room full of “Margauxs” gathered to celebrate one another—wearing their Margaux shoes, of course.
No detail was spared as every part of the dinner spoke to the success of the Margaux vision. Hosted in Eny Lee Parker s incredibly chic Clinton Hill apartment, there was a level of warmth felt throughout the evening that can only be achieved when someone welcomes you into their home. Guests such as Chloe Malle, Alexandra Michler Kopelman, Anny Choi, Jordy Murr, and Vesper Ireland marveled over the food being prepared in the kitchen by Lauren Bruhn as they took photos of the romantic Molly Ford curated florals that lined the dining tables.
Halfway through the night, the magic in the room took a very literal turn as dinner guests were surprised by a performance from the young female magician Anna DeGuzman. (Vogue.com s very own Chloe Malle even took on the pivotal role of magician’s assistant for one trick). At the end of the night guests were still exclaiming “..but how did she do that!” as they enjoyed their slice of From Lucie cake and took their final sips of wine. As everyone ventured back out onto the Brooklyn streets, the resounding takeaway from the wonderful evening was that you can never have enough pairs of Margaux shoes and that we should all be attending more magic shows!